I don't think anybody has given a hard definition of "expository preaching" yet, and nobody has mentioned textual preaching. A pudding's proof is in the tasting, not in a bystander's opinions of the recipe. If a preacher is getting the job done in the church, he's ahead of the pack regardless of what style his sermons are.
Many a youngun has graduated from college or grad school with a determination to be an expository preacher and has made congregations groan under the burden. "He could go down deeper, stay down longer, and come up drier than any preacher in the church's history." It's kinda like opera: done well, the singer sways thousands, but done by ordinary singers, it rivals the rack for torture.
I'm ordinary. Profoundly ordinary. Pathologically ordinary, in fact, and I'll bet you are, too. Ordinary preachers shouldn't undertake extraordinary homiletical feats. The wreckage is just too gorey.
Many a youngun has graduated from college or grad school with a determination to be an expository preacher and has made congregations groan under the burden. "He could go down deeper, stay down longer, and come up drier than any preacher in the church's history." It's kinda like opera: done well, the singer sways thousands, but done by ordinary singers, it rivals the rack for torture.
I'm ordinary. Profoundly ordinary. Pathologically ordinary, in fact, and I'll bet you are, too. Ordinary preachers shouldn't undertake extraordinary homiletical feats. The wreckage is just too gorey.